Puneet Varma (Editor)

Blue Blood and Mutiny

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7.6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
September 18, 2007

Pages
  
432 pages

Originally published
  
18 September 2007

Genre
  
Non-fiction

3.8/5
Goodreads

Subject
  
Business history

Media type
  
Print, e-book

ISBN
  
978-0060881917

Author
  
Patricia Beard

Country
  
United States of America

Blue Blood and Mutiny t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRGHHhQiL6XkmQhfl

Publisher
  
William Morrow and Company

Similar
  
Patricia Beard books, Non-fiction books

Book review blue blood and mutiny by patricia beard


Blue Blood and Mutiny: The Fight for the Soul of Morgan Stanley is a non-fiction book by American journalist and historian Patricia Beard. The book was initially published by William Morrow on September 18, 2007.

Contents

Overview

The books focuses on the history of investment bank Morgan Stanley and on how a powerful fight within the firm was orchestrated by a group of eight retired executives, led to the removal of its then CEO, Philip J. Purcell. The group was led by S. Parker Gilbert and Robert Scott, a former Morgan Stanley chairman and president respectively. The group carefully worked behind the scenes to publicise Purcell as a Midwestern rustic lacking sophistication and understanding of elite financial markets. Their efforts were aimed at restoring the ethical foundation of the firm and resulted in the triumphant return of John J. Mack to do "first class business in a first class way".

Criticism

THERE are insider accounts, and then there are really insider accounts. Patricia Beard’s “Blue Blood and Mutiny: The Fight for the Soul of Morgan Stanley,” falls into the latter category as it describes the civil war at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter after the firms merged. With the cooperation of the rebels, including Anson Beard, a former brother-in-law of Ms. Beard, “Blue Blood and Mutiny” (William Morrow, $26.95) provides the closest look yet at the former executives who took the fight to Philip J. Purcell, the chief executive of the combined firm.

From 1997 through 2005, Mr. Purcell, the aloof Midwesterner who had run Dean Witter, the retail brokerage, sat atop Morgan Stanley, the bluest of the blue-blood firms. The merger promised to transform the financial industry, but the melding of the consumer and institutional businesses did not go smoothly. As the firm stumbled repeatedly, the rebels began a very public fight to oust Mr. Purcell. Ms. Beard’s book is full of meticulous, inside detail — at one point, after the dismissal of two top bankers (in what came to be known as the Monday Massacre) she recounts how Tarek Abdel-Meguid, another senior banker, flew back from vacation, arriving at the office still in an aqua T-shirt and Topsiders. But at times the book drowns in the details, bogging down the narrative.

The New York Times

References

Blue Blood and Mutiny Wikipedia